Blood Cells
Tell the Full Diabetes Story
For Children and Their Grown-up Children
Majid Ali,
M.D.
In diabetes, excess insulin and
acidity in the blood damages blood cell membranes,
clumps cells, forms crystals of acids, and weakens
immune and hunter cells of the blood. In this
article, the blood and its cells tell the diabetes
story.
I hope parents will study the
microscopic pictures in this article, understanding
their meanings, and then study them again with their
children to teach them the dangers of eating excess
sugary drinks and foods.
These pictures make it easy to
learn and understand how diabetes causes poor
circulation, heart attacks, and stroke. —for prevention and reversal—more simply and
elegantly than any medical textbook or a doctor. Of
course, cells can tell their diabetes story only to
those who are willing to listen to them. We cannot
understand the "cell-speak" if we keep repeating
that diabetes is a sugar problem. Sugar is not a
cell nor is diabetes cells. Nor can we communicate
with cells if our focus is on excess insulin or insulin
resistance.
Blood Cells Tell the
Cell Membrane Story
Cell membranes exist to separate
internal order of cells from their external
disorder. They are responsible for cellular
cross-talk. So, the health and strength of cells in
all parts of the body depend on the the health and
strength of their membranes. There are no lab tests
available at this time for directly assessing the
structural and functional integrity cell membrane in
the pancreas (the source of insulin), liver, heart,
brain, kidneys, muscles, and other body organs. The
state of blood cell membranes, easily evaluated by
direct microscopic examination of the blood,
provides useful information, albeit indirect, about
cell membranes in other body organs. Blood cells
tell the story of cell membranes in all organs in
the body. body I elaborate this crucial point by
presenting the case of insulin and insulin receptor
protein embedded in cell membranes.
The Crank and Crank-Shaft Model of Diabetes
At the cell membrane level, diabetes develops when
insulin fails to move (activate) insulin receptor
protein embedded in the membrane. The blood
cells assessing cell membrane practical
results The cell membranes become resistant to
insulin when they become chemicalized—plasticized,
so to speak—and hardened, immobilizing the insulin
receptors embedded in the membranes. The insulin
receptor is a protein that criss-crosses the cell
membrane like a cord. One of the consequences of
grease buildup on cell membranes is that insulin
receptor becomes turned and twisted, literally and
figuratively. In a previous paper, I offered the
analogy of a crank and a crank-shaft to explain
insulin resistance. I visualize insulin as a crank—a
device that transmits rotary motion—and the insulin
receptor protein as a crank-shaft embedded in the
cell membrane.receptor protein as a crank-shaft
embedded in the cell membranes.
In this series of articles and the companion radio
and TV series on the subject, I will explain and illustrate how the
following four blood cell types tell the full
diabetes story:
Red Blood Cells of
a Healthy Person
(upper picture)
Early Stress on
Red Blood Cells
(lower picture)


High Blood Insulin
and Blood Sugar Levels Increase Blood
Acidity and Free Radical Activity, Which
Form Microclots and Crystals in the
Circulating Blood. |


vvv
When Hunter
Blood Cells Become the Hunted, and the
Hunted Microbes become the Hunters |

Large Deposits of Crystals of Acids in the
Circulating Blood of a Patient With
Uncontrolled Diabetess |



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Red blood cells
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White blood cells
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Platelet corpuscles.
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Endo cells (cells lining the inside of blood vessels
which interact with the above three types of cells.
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Blood plasma
Blood plasma is the fluid that nourishes them and
bathes blood cell. It is not cells, yet the blood
cells cannot tell their diabetes story fully without
speaking about this fluid that nourishes them and
bathes them.
Pictures Tell Healing Stories
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Children’s Healing
Stories
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Blood Cells
Tell the Full Diabetes Story
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Blood
Cells Tell the Full Heart Disease Story
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Our
Breath, the Best First-aid
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What Is Oxygen?
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How To Be Healthy?
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What Is Life Span
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Blood Cells Tell the
Full Diabetes
Story
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Red Blood Cells Tell the Full
Diabetes Story
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White Blood
Cells Tell the Full Diabetes Story
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Blood Platelet Tell the
Diabetes Story
k* Endo Cells Tell
the Full Diabetes Story
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Blood Corpuscles
and Taurine Tell the
Diabetes Story
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Blood Cells Tell the
Full Diabetes
Story
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Blood Pictures Tell the
Blood Story - AA Oxidopathy

Articles in My Insulin-Diabetes Library
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Diabetes Pandemic
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Subtypes of
Diabetes Type 2
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The Oxyegn Model of Diabetes
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The Oxygen
Model of Obesity
k Insulin
Evolutionary
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Seven Stages of
Insulin Toxicity
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Less Insulin, More Life
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Evidence for Insulin Toxicity
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If Mice Can Reverse
Diabetes, Why Can't People?
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Dysox Explains
the Exercise-Weight-Loss Disconnect
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